Title: FGFOA Webinar
1- FGFOA Webinar
- Bond Market Updates Continuing Disclosure,
Private Use, Record Retention and other
Post-Issuance Compliance - May 21, 2015
- Presented By Erik Dingwall
2 BLX Group LLC
4010 West Boy Scout Blvd. Suite 280
Tampa, FL 33607 ph 813-872-6147
fax 813-872-7295 www.blxgroup.com
Continuing Disclosure
Erik Dingwall
May 21, 2015
3What is Municipal Continuing Disclosure?
- S.E.C. Rule 15c2-12
- Requires two types of disclosures
- annual reporting of financial information and
operating data (including the audited financial
statements) - material events
- Type of financial and operating data to be
disclosedvaries according to bond issue type - Type of financial and operating data to be
discloseddetermined at the time the bonds are
issued -
4Rule 15c2-12 (July 1995)
- Underwriter (broker/dealer) required to get a
written commitment from Obligated Person - Commitment to disclose annual financial
information or operating data generally of the
type included in the OS including audited
financial statements - Provide notices of eleven material events and
failure to file - Continuing Disclosure Agreement/Certificate
- Bonds cannot be purchased or sold without this
commitment
5Rule 15c2-12 (December 2010 Amendments)
- Elimination of the VRDO Exemption
- Additional Event Notices added to original 11
Events - Timing for submitting Event Notices - Certain
notices to be filed no later than ten (10)
business days following the occurrence of the
event. - Filing with Respect to Adverse Tax Events - The
Amendment revises this provision to include
adverse tax opinions, the issuance by the IRS of
proposed or final determinations of taxability,
Notices of Proposed Issue (IRS Form 5701-TEB) or
other material notices or determinations with
respect to the tax status of the security, or
other material events affecting the tax status of
the security.
6Listed Events
- Events that require notification within ten (10)
business days - Principal and interest payment delinquencies
- Unscheduled draws on reserve
- Unscheduled draws on credit enhancement
- Substitution of credit or liquidity provider or
failure to perform - Adverse tax opinion, the issuance by the IRS of
proposed or final determination of taxability,
adverse tax opinions, or Notices of Proposed
Issue (IRS Form 5701-TEB) - Defeasances
- Rating changes
- Tender offers
- Bankruptcy, insolvency, receivership, or similar
event of an obligated person
7Listed Events
- Events that required notification, if material
- Nonpayment related defaults
- Modification to bondholder rights
- Optional, contingent or unscheduled bond calls
- Release, substitution or sale of property
securing repayment of bonds - Merger, consolidation, acquisition, or sale of
all or substantially all of the assets of an
obligated person, other than in the ordinary
course of business, and the entry into or
termination of an agreement to undertake such
action - Appointment of a successor trustee or change in
name of a trustee
8Consequences of Failure to Comply
- Must disclose such failure in future Official
Statements for the period of 5 years following
the failure - Suits or remedies may be brought by bondholders
who claim they would have not bought, sold or
held the security had the information been
provided when agreed - Misleading or omitted information may lead to
securities fraud - Including only the information specifically
required under the continuing disclosure
agreement may not be deemed sufficient to satisfy
the requirement and could result in securities
fraud under 10b-5 - Non-disclosure of events occurring between the
end of the fiscal year and the filing date could
result in securities fraud
9Market Developments SEC Enforcement
- Increased attention to continuing disclosure
compliance - SEC studies have identified inadequacies in
municipal disclosure practices - SEC enforcement division has launched a number of
investigations with respect to disclosure - For the first time, the SEC charged an issuer and
underwriter with falsely stating to bondholders
in an official statement that the issuer had been
properly providing annual financial information
and event notices in connection with a prior bond
offering, when if fact, it had not -
-
-
10Market Developments Underwriters Review
- In Release No. 34-62184A, the SEC clarified and
reinforced its view of the obligation of an
underwriter to consider the obligated persons
record of compliance with prior continuing
disclosure undertakings when recommending a
security - The SEC has made it clear that the underwriter
cannot rely solely on representations by an
issuer or obligated person as to its compliance
with continuing disclosure - The underwriter must conduct its own
investigation and make an independent judgment
concerning the issuers compliance (look back is
5 years) - Failures discovered by the underwriter may be
disclosed in the official statement for the new
bond issue - Failures in compliance may result in a written
policy assigning key personnel or retention of an
outside consultant to assist in the preparation
of annual reports and event notices
11MCDC (S.E.C. Self-Reporting Initiative)
- Self-report possible material inaccurate
statements in final OSs regarding prior
continuing disclosure compliance - Favorable settlement terms for self-reporting
- Scope of review Official Statements issued
within the past five years (2009-2014) - review would cover the prior five years from
issue date of each OS - review may need to go back as far as 10 years
(2004 for bonds issued in 2009) -
12MCDC (S.E.C. Self-Reporting Initiative)
- If SEC staff determines an OS contains material
misstatement or omission, enforcement action will
be recommended - Underwriter fine of 30,000 - 60,000 OS
identified with a material misstatement (capped
at 500,000 under the program) - Underwriter engage independent consultant to
review procedures and implement the
recommendations - Obligor consent to a cease and desist order
- failures must be corrected and disclosed in
future OSs - Penalties are related to entities - Individuals
are not protected under MCDC - S.E.C. has indicated that if failures are
discovered outside of the MCDC program, penalties
will be much more severe - One enforcement action under MCDC issuer was
already under investigation no discussion of
the material misstatements -
13MCDC - What Are Underwriters Doing
- Underwriters are reviewing all their
transactions since 2009 - lead negotiated and competitive deals
- Each underwriter is establishing their own
criteria to determine self-reporting candidates - number of days late
- underlying vs. bond insurer rating changes
- annual report content
- comprehensive reviews vs. spot checks
- CUSIP linking
- Underwriter standard may be different than
Obligors standard - Monetary incentive to report as many failures in
order to remain under the blanket of the MCDC
500,000 cap - Most have reached out to Obligors for back-up
to close the loop on initial findings
14MCDC - Problems Encountered
- Review process is not simple
- Multiple repositories
- Access to NRMSIRs
- underwriter have better access to NRMSIRs
- Obligors have the evidence
- DisclosureUSA.org limitations
- Bloomberg upload date vs. when actually
received date (delay) - CUSIP linking
- EMMA - archived documents
- Multiple annual report due dates
- Dissemination agents may not file timely
- Issuer filings do not clearly indicate if such
represents the Issuers 15c2-12 continuing
disclosure requirements (e.g. CAFRs)
15 BLX
Group LLC 51 West 52nd Street
New York, NY 10019 ph
212-506-5200 fax 212-506-5151 www.blxgro
up.com
Post-Issuance Tax Compliance
Alan Bond
May 21, 2015
16What is Post-Issuance Tax Compliance
- Post-issuance tax compliance begins with the
debt issuance process itself and provides for a
continuing focus on investments of bond proceeds
and use of bond-financed property. It will
require identifying existing policies, the
responsible people, the applicable procedures,
and the affected population - After the Bonds Are Issued Then What?
- Advisory Committee on Tax-Exempt and Governmental
Entities
17 Post-Issuance Compliance Overview
- IRS Focus on Post-Issuance Tax Matters
- The average tax-exempt bond issue is outstanding
for 25-30 years - Issuers and conduit borrowers must comply with
federal tax rules for the life of the original
bonds and any refunding bonds - Easy for foot faults and errors to occur or for
borrowers to lack requisite records and detailed
information to rebuff IRS in an audit challenging
the tax-exempt status of bonds -
18 Post-Issuance Compliance Overview
- Why is the IRS focused on post-issuance
compliance? - IRS is looking to ensure that the federal subsidy
provided by the interest exclusion on tax-exempt
bonds is properly applied - Interest exclusion cost to federal government
estimated to be approximately 200 billion in
Fiscal Years 2008-2012
19 Post-Issuance Compliance Overview
- Why should you care about the IRS post-issuance
compliance initiative? - Failure to comply with the federal tax
requirements will jeopardize the preferential tax
status of those bonds - Defending tax-exempt status of bonds in an IRS
audit is expensive, stressful, and time consuming - Tarnish reputation in credit markets
- Financial settlement to protect bondholders can
be costly
20Elements of an Effective Post-Issuance
Compliance Program
- Designation of tax compliance point person(s)
- Continuing education and training for individuals
responsible for post-issuance compliance - Tracking and allocating the expenditure of bond
proceeds - Monitoring the investment income and arbitrage
compliance restriction - Monitoring the use of bond financed property
- Periodic review of management contracts, other
facility use agreements, and research contracts
by experts in tax matters - Addressing changes in use of bond financed
property through self-help remediation and VCAP - Recordkeeping and retention policies and
procedures - Periodic compliance reviews/ongoing communication
with outside tax specialists - Written policy and procedures relating to
post-issuance compliance -
-
21Policies and Procedures
- Evolution of IRS Written Policy Inquiry
- Compliance Check Questionnaires
- IRS Form 8038-B new issuance of BABs (Rev Jan
2010) - IRS Form 8038-TC new issuance of Tax Credit
Bonds (Rev June 2010) - IRS Form 8038 new issuance of Private Activity
Bonds (Rev April 2011) - IRS Form 8038-G new issuance of Governmental
Bonds (Rev Sept 2011) - IRS Schedule K (for nonprofit organizations)
2013 version has 3 separate questions - Questions regarding written procedures have
become much more explicit - Internal Revenue Manual provides that issuers and
borrowers with written post-issuance compliance
policies and procedures will be given a more
favorable settlement during VCAP -
-
22Policies and Procedures
- Do you have written policies/procedures in place?
- When implemented?
- Who is responsible?
- Are they being reviewed annually to keep them
relevant - Importance of Written Policies
- Demonstrates taking post-issuance compliance
responsibilities seriously - Assigns responsibility for certain tasks and
responsibilities to specific individuals or
departments - Provides you with a compliance framework in which
to work - Memorializes processes and activities to aid in
the event of staff turnover - Reduces risk of IRS winning willful neglect case
-
-
23Policies and Procedures
- What should be included in a Policy?
- Designation of post-issuance tax compliance point
person(s) - Tax-exempt bond tax law compliance requirements
including - Documentation
- External counsel/advisors
- Investments/role of trustee
- Arbitrage and yield restriction
- Private use of bond proceeds
- Identification and correction of violations
- Expenditures
- Final allocations
24Policies and Procedures
- What should be included in a Policy? (continued)
- Record keeping requirements
- Annual review and training
- Frequency of internal compliance checks
- Important to review annually and update as
necessary
25Record Retention
- What records must be maintained?
- Documents related to the bond transaction (entire
transcript) - Documents related to post-closing elections
- Bond Year Selection
- Retro-Active or Selective Application of
Regulations - Documents evidencing any investment of bond
proceeds - Trust Bank Statements
- Internal Records (expenditure detail)
- Documents evidencing expenditure of bond proceeds
- Use of bond financed property by public and
private sources - Sources of payment or security for the bonds
- Arbitrage Reporting Rebate and Yield
Restriction -
26Record Retention
- What records must be maintained? (continued)
- Section 6001 of the Internal Revenue Code
requires the retention of records to support tax
positions taken - If not supported, the IRS can draw its own
conclusions based upon the information presented - Records must be maintained by
- Issuers
- Conduit Borrowers
- Bondholders
-
-
27Private Use Monitoring
- Governmental Bond Requirements
- At least 90 of the proceeds of the bond issue
must be used for governmental purposes - The 90 requirement is increased to 95 in
certain circumstances. See Tax Certificate for
details - Aggregate private use generally cannot exceed the
lesser of 90, 95 or 15 million -
-
28Private Use Monitoring
- Basic Tax Analysis in Governmental Bond
Financings -
- Are the bond financed assets used by members of
the general public? - Does a party other than a State or Local
Government agency or department have a special
legal entitlement to use the bond financed
assets? - Private business use can arise under a management
contract even if the assets serve the general
public - Use of bond financed assets by a charitable
organization (e.g., a Section 501(c)(3)
organization) will generally give rise to private
business use - Contracts with the federal government will
generally give rise to private business use -
-
29Private Use Monitoring
- Examples
-
- Lease of bond financed space to a for-profit
entity - Certain management contracts
- Naming rights
30Private Use Exceptions
- Management Contract Guidelines IRS Rev. Proc.
97-13 and IRS Notice 2014-67 - Provides framework for contracts with
non-employees/outside providers for various
services involving the use of bond financed
property - Considers term and fee structure
- Contracts with non-employees
- Professional corporations
- Cafeteria operations
- Outsourcing of certain operations to third
parties -
-
31Private Use Exceptions
- Short term use exceptions
- In certain circumstances, if lt 100 days of use
- In certain circumstances, if lt 50 days of use
- Depends on user profile and terms of contract
32Private Use Exceptions
- Incidental Contracts or Arrangements
- Small physical use of space ATM, kiosks,
vending machines, laundry facilities - Cannot exceed 2.5 of proceeds or space of
facility - Contract for services supporting organization
activities - Janitorial services
- Equipment repair
- Billing activities or similar services
33Examples of Potential Private Use of
Bond-Financed Property
- Cafeteria Contracts
- Gift Shops
- Non-Employee Contracts
- Outside Parties
- Leases of Property
- Food Court
- Starbucks
- Certain Parking Agreements
- Short-Term Use of Space
-
-
34How to Measure Private Use
- Fundamentals
- Identify property financed by each issue of
outstanding bonds - Was the original bond issue refunded? If so, by
what bond issue? - Who uses that space? How much space are they
using and for how long? Is there any private use? - Did you allocate equity to any portion of the
facility? - What records support the allocation of bond
proceeds and/or equity to that facility? -
-
-
-
-
-
-
35How to Measure Private Use
- 4 Primary Methods
- Square footage
- Time of use
- Time/space analysis
- Revenues
- Under the applicable tax regulations, the
measurement of private use must be reasonable.
Determining what method is most appropriate may
require professional judgment.
36How to Measure Private Use
- Private use identified at the time of issuance of
the bonds - Step 1 Quantify the expected private use
- Option A Contribute equity or other amounts to
projects to cover private use - Option B Allocate private use to bad money
portion of the bond issue, if possible
37How to Measure Private Use
- Monitoring private use after the bonds are
issued - Step 1 Review use of bond-financed projects and
applicable third party agreements annually - Step 2 Calculate private use per bond issue
- Establish that less than 10 of bond proceeds are
privately used - For the entire period that the bonds are
outstanding
38Identification and Correction of Violations
- Various self-help remedies are available in the
event of the violations relating to - Limits of use of tax-exempt bond proceeds
- Investment of tax-exempt bond proceeds
- Use of bond financed assets
39Identification and Correction of Violations
- Remedial actions include
- Defeasance of a portion of the bonds
- Using the disposition proceeds from the sale of
the bond financed asset for another qualified
purpose - VCAP Voluntary Closing Agreement Program
40Benefits of an Effective Post-Issuance
Compliance Program
- Remove risk of non-compliance and associated
hazards - Generate efficient and prompt response to any IRS
inquiry - Easy and cost-effective review process at time of
refunding - Identify remaining portion of bond proceeds
allowed for private use - Provide historic analysis of post-issuance
compliance for outstanding tax-exempt debt - Memorialize institutional memory in cases of
staff turnover
41Contact Information
- Erik Dingwall
- BLX Group
- 813-872-6840
- edingwall_at_blxgroup.com